Rental Operations

National Car Rental Canada Sued in Wrongful Death

October 17, 2007
• by Staff

Former NHL player Rob Ramage and the company that rented him the vehicle used in a fatal collision could soon both face significant financial penalties in a civil trial in St. Louis, according to the Canwest News Service.

Ramage and National Car Rental (Canada) Ltd. are both defendants in a wrongful death lawsuit filed in 2004 by the family of former Chicago Blackhawk’s defenseman Keith Magnuson.

Ramage, 48, was convicted by an Ontario Superior Court jury this week of five charges, including impaired driving causing death as a result of the Dec. 15, 2003 accident just north of Toronto.

Magnuson, 56, was killed instantly when the rented Chrysler Intrepid driven by Ramage clipped one car and then collided with an SUV.

Rental Operations

Enterprise’s Assistant Vice President of Technology Innovation, Derik Reiser, spoke at the conference as one of four participants in a panel discussion sponsored by the Society of Collision Repair Specialists.

Thanks to the preferred partnership with Sixt as a direct provider, the Thomas Cook and partner travel agencies can offer their customers clear increases in value on their journeys, like access to a broad premium fleet of numerous vehicle classes, high-quality services, and an attractive price performance ratio.

With rental facilities located on military bases throughout the U.S. and in Germany, Enterprise is uniquely positioned to provide U.S. military members and their families with unmatched convenience and world-renowned customer service through every step of the car rental process.